Hi Tom
........ I usually start with the one on the underside rather than the two on the top.
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Ironically, I did replace a UJ on one saw - and ended up machining my own replacement part to avoid the cost of a new one.Not all parts are proprietary. The universal joints, in particular, are better sourced elsewhere; for half the price of an original, I got a better quality replacement from RS.
Learnt just last week that a colleague is scaling back his work and selling off his machines. The saw bench was mentioned, I could try and get a picky?I'd have preferred a 275 when I bought a 175 about 25 years ago. As others have said theses machines are identical apart from the motor. On mine the bars and spacing blocks were missing so I made some. The fence was damaged so I fixed it. I then moved the riving knife back, fitted a couple of new toothed belts and bought 12" thin kerf blades that offer less cutting resistance to compensate for the lower HP motor. Yes, if you push hard on a 3 1/2" cut it will slow a little. I've treated my saw correctly over the years and the only time it's objected is after many feet of heavy ripping when the thermal trip cuts the power. A few minutes later it's back to normal.
The Startrite is a nice solid saw that will offer years of good service with little maintenance and continue making accurate cuts.
Colin
Not got around to checking if it did anything, but I should mention either end has a different size hole, and it was offset, so not a case of things canceling out.That rectangular bar does look the correct shape and should have a kink in each end......Turning it over shouldn't make any difference as it will fit either way, as you have found out.
Must look that up to have an idea of what they are, cheers.f there is wear in the Oilite bearings that are a push fit into each end of that bar, this may introduce a problem with slop and therefore alignment issues.
......but I should mention either end has a different size hole, and it was offset, so not a case of things canceling out.
There appears to be no wear in that regards Deema.The cleats far as I know should not touch the bottom, they should ride on the cheeks of the groove
I've been doing the plus minus thing, to a better standard than what the feelers would read.can you confirm that when the saw is at 90 degrees it’s actually parallel to the slot? If not, by how much is it out?
Seems like a real good blade, no runout from it what I can see, consistent readings throughout,assuming you have a top class blade in it
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